Axxman300, All Around Tool

Sunday, November 11, 2012

I've lost a lot of weight. Feels great, but last week I got
my head shaved. I’ll tell you why…

I spent the first decade of the 21st century 125
pounds overweight. I wrecked my back making for a convenient excuse to cover my
weight gain. I was sad, depressed, and it turns out I was deeply angry. I didn't know about the anger until two years ago. A job I loved was gone, and an
uncertain future loomed.

In December of 2006 I stopped drinking. I am an alcoholic,
and there’s no pretty way to say this. It was a health issue by then and a
financial problem too. So I stopped. The following February I began my first
semester at Monterey Peninsula College planning to take the composition, and
writing classes. I ended up in Oceanography and Spanish along with my English
class. I discovered I’m good at science, and my uncertain future now had a
focus. My money is limited and I can only afford two or three classes each
semester. This makes for slow going, but I’m enjoying the ride.

The writing classes have been the most important for me. Not
because they’ve given me more options, but because they unlocked parts of my
psyche allowing me to discover things about myself. The anger I talked about
was revealed while writing a poem for class. It scared me due to the darkness I
was tapping into. I had no idea where it came from. The poem was about a hero
who is called upon to save the day, but at the final second he turns his back
and lets the bad guys win.

So what does this have to do with shaving my head?

As my weight-loss became substantial I began to see a
familiar face in the mirror. Sure, it was great to see the old, thinner me in
the morning again. The problem was that a short while after this some old bad
habits returned. Not the drinking, but some of the game-playing I used to keep
myself out of the race. There was a moment where I worried about losing the
progress I’ve made, and so my hair had to go. When I was thin my hair was
usually long-ish; now when I see my reflection I see the current me, and the
focus has returned.

Six months from now my hair will be long again, and I should
be another forty pounds lighter. The way I see it, by then I should have the
bad habits under control, or at least farther along with the rest of my life so
they can’t reach me.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

So many of the ghosts I’ve seen I didn’t get a good look at.
They look like regular people, and unless they’re wearing period clothes it is
usually impossible to spot them. Fort Ord evens the playing field somewhat
because most of the ghosts there are wearing a uniform and the style of uniform
gives away their age. I’ve told you about the African-American in the OG
(pickle-suit), and the guy sitting in my truck wearing an Army orderly’s
uniform.

There was also the Captain who almost knocked me over one
morning. I was on the alley between the 2-27 barracks, and I was reading the
stickers still on the windows of the upper floors. As I turned I had to jump to
one side as this man wearing the old khaki uniform, and captain’s bars on his
shoulders barreled past me. In a step and a half he vanished. I can still see
him. He wore the old bus-driver hat, and carried a brown leather briefcase. He
had a determined look on his face. The cut of the uniform placed him in the
late 1950s to early 1960s.

Charlie 3-9 Barracks. He sat at the far entrance.

A year or so later I was simply out for a walk. Fort Ord is
at the halfway point between my home, and the peninsula. It’s a great place to
walk because the distances are marked, and you can keep track of who far you’ve
gone. I was finishing up a three-mile loop, and decided to cut up through the
alley between the Machu, 3-9 barracks. The end I approached from is almost
blocked by a pair of Monterey Cypress trees. Their long branches reach across
the alley entrance, and they make it impossible to see through to the other
side.

I came up at an angle which allowed me to walk under one
tree, and out onto the alley way. As I rounded the corner of the neighboring
building I saw movement on the steps of the opposite barracks. I stopped as this place can be tricky with
gangs, and homeless folks sometimes hanging out. What I saw blew my mind.

The tree I stood beneath as I watched him.

Sitting on the steps of the barracks was a man. He wore the camouflage
pants, and the black Corcoran combat boots. The upper half of his body was a
shadowy outline. I could see enough definition that I could tell he was smoking
a cigarette. I stood there looking at him - really looking at him in detail.
There was no question about what he was. He didn’t react to the wind blowing
through the trees. He just sat on the steps, head hunched just so, and every
once in a while taking a drag from his invisible cigarette.

I marveled at his lower half. The sun reflected from the
shine of his boots. I could see his laces tied at the top. He had something in
the thigh cargo pockets of his pants, and the brass buckle glinted. I wondered
what might happen if I touched him. Would I feel anything?

The shadowy upper half was interesting too. It resembled a
garden variety shadow in its consistency. It was solid, and I couldn’t see
through it. I could make out the fingers on each hand as they rested just above
his knees.

His head turned my direction, and he sat up straight. He
took one last puff, stood up, and turned to walk inside. He vanished as he went
through the door. He had seen me. I assumed he was a residual vision; a
recording in space time. I was wrong. This guy posed a bunch of questions about
how things work on the other side. Why stay there? Do ghosts get cigarette
breaks? Why not wear comfortable shoes? Why keep your boot s shined?

I walked up those steps, and pulled the door open. Standing
just inside I stood listening for the sound of boots. It was silent. I
apologized in a calm voice, and I left. Of all of my ghost sightings this one remains
the most interesting to me. I know there were two suicides in the building
during the time-frame of the ghost’s uniform. Maybe he feels a sense of duty to
the men he left behind. Maybe he feels like a failure, and cannot move on.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Ghosts don’t scare me. Well, most ghosts don’t scare me.
Most of the time I don’t realize they’re a ghost as most of them just look like
regular people. Even the few times where I knew I was looking at a ghost I was
not frightened, just fascinated as I tried to take in as much information as I
could. Still, there are a couple of times where I was scared enough to run.

The first one was classic. I had slipped into one of the
huge three-story barracks to locate a mural I’d been told about. The barracks was
essentially a large apartment building. The first floor was pitch black. The
windows were all boarded up. I had a small flashlight, but the pure darkness
engulfed the beam so I could only see what was in the light beam. I found the
mural in the mess hall; a Cobra painted on the wall, and I snapped a few
pictures. I figured where there was one mural there should be more so I searched
the entire building. I love poking around abandoned places, there is a thrill
of discovery, and the thrill of breaking the law makes it a unique experience.

I found nothing more to photograph. I returned carefully
down stairs to the huge entry hall. I waited a moment by the doorway to listen
for footsteps. The last thing I needed was to walk right into a cop. So I’m
standing there in the pitch black and a voice comes from behind me.

“Hey buddy.” A male voice said.

I clicked on my light as I swung around. I was sure I was
going to see a police officer standing there with a huge grin on his face.
Instead the hallway was empty. The voice had come from less than a foot away. I
bolted out of the door and ran all the way back to my truck.

Looking back I can still hear the voice. It sounded curious,
like “Hey buddy, what are you doing here?”
I had heard voices before, but it was in another building where I was on a well-lit
floor. That time I heard two men yelling at each other on a floor below me. I
had just come from that floor, and it was empty.

The second scary ghost happened in the daylight.

I had gone to East Garrison, which is the dark-side of the
moon at Fort Ord, and parked my truck at the gate. I was with my friend, Mike, a
former Army Ranger, and Navajo. Mike likes to run, and I don’t so what we do is
plan to link up at a specific location within a window of time. He’ll run five
miles in twenty minutes, and we decide to link up on a large road just opposite
of the huge ammo bunkers just south of the Pre-Ranger site. It’s a two mile
hike for me, but I like the challenge.

I chugged my way up the road, into the trees, down into a
slot canyon, and made the road in exactly twenty minutes. I was feeling like
Superman. I waited for Mike…and waited…and waited. No problem; in our planning we
had a secondary plan that if we didn’t link up at the appointed time we would
return along a set course until we got back to the truck. I figured we’d bump
into each other at some point on the way back.

I began walking down the hill. I hear Mike call my name. I
call out “Hooah!” the universal greeting of grunts everywhere. There is
silence. Oh well, he knows where I am, and he’ll find me. I continue moving,
and a short time later I here Mike call my name again. He sounds closer, but
now I have moved down the ridge to a point where I my view into the canyon is
obscured by the Manzanita that grows thick here. I yell Mike’s name, but there
is no response. I yell “Hooah Ranger!” and suddenly there is the sound of radio
communication. It sounded like someone had a police radio somewhere below me in
the canyon. It seemed fairly close.

The voice stopped. I shrug, and continue moving. Then I hear
Mike call my name again. I stop and yell “Hooah Ranger” again. The radio
chatter erupts from the canyon again. This time it sounds closer. Fuck this, I’m
running. I take off at a good clip down a side trail that takes me into taller
trees, and thick brush. I hear Mike call me again, and the radio chatter pipes
up immediately. Now it seems to be coming from close by. Close enough I should
see the source, but I don’t. The brush is so thick I should hear someone moving
through it.

The radio chatter is now following me.

I’m running downhill along a narrowing trail, and the radio
thing is keeping up with me just off to my left. I can hear someone relaying my
position on this radio, and a voice responding ordering to stay with me. I pick
my knees up and I run as fast as I can. The narrow trail finally broke out into
a wide open space just about the BLM road. I got down to the road, and
continued to run all the way to Barloy Canyon Road. The Radio chatter stopped
somewhere on the way.

I got back to my truck in record time. Mike joined me a few
minutes later. I asked him why he didn't link up after he saw me. I told him I
heard him call me, and he told me he had seen on the ridge, and called to me.
He said he didn’t hear me call back. Then he saw me head down the ridge, so he
figured he’d meet me back at the truck later. It asked him why he kept calling
me.

He said he only called me once.

I tell him I heard his voice calling me a couple of times. I
tell him about the radio sounds, and how it followed me down the ridge. Mike
shook his head. He didn't hear any of that. Driving back to Pacific Grove we
discussed possible explanations. Maybe sound bouncing off of the fog. Maybe
there was a SEAL team working in the area (SEALs still train at Fort Ord). We
both agreed it wasn't a SEAL team as those guys just don’t make noise in the
field. It is the only time I have ever felt fear when encountering the unknown.

For about six years I roamed the abandoned Fort Ord slipping
into empty buildings searching for murals to photograph. The Army base is essentially
a small city spread out between Marina to the north, and Seaside to the south.
On this autumn day I was working the older part of the base on the Marina side.
It was built during WWII, and added onto as the base grew. I had parked my
truck in a parking lot in the area of the old base hospital. I grabbed my Canon
and headed off into the maze of wooden buildings.

When I was about a half mile away I realized I’d left my
extra film on the floor of my truck. I turned around cursing myself, and walked
back to the truck. Sneaking into buildings requires timing and luck so this
mistake was throwing everything off. Closing in on the parking area I see a man
sitting in the passenger seat of my truck. “Oh
great, some asshole is robbing my truck!” I think. I change my angel of
approach so that I come up from the blind spot. I pull my multi-tool from my
pocket, and open the pliers.

Why not the knife? Great question, I don’t know how to fight
with a knife. Knives complicate things. Pliers make better sense for the
tactically less inclined because all one needs to do is jab, and squeeze hard. It doesn't matter where you grab someone with the pliers, they will scream, and
they will comply. I ran scenarios in my head as I made my way to my truck.

Then I stopped. The guy wasn't moving.

He was sitting in the passenger seat looking straight ahead.
He had short hair, and a thin light-brown mustache. He wore a white, short-sleeve
shirt. He wasn’t rifling through my glove box, and he was alone. My truck was
the only vehicle in the lot. I put away my pliers. This guy obviously had
mental problems, and a violent confrontation would have been a bad idea. I
stepped to my right until I was in his view. He turned to look at me. The
sadness on his face was profound. He made eye contact. There was a moment of
shock as he saw me.

He vanished.

I stood there for a few seconds not sure what to do. I
opened the door just to make sure he hadn't I don’t know…slid under the seat or
something. He was gone. I grabbed my film, locked the door, and walked around
my truck to make sure it was secure. I resumed my hunting, but my mind dwelled
on the guy I’s seen sitting in my truck.

I had a ghost in my truck at Fort Ord once before. He was
invisible, but I could smell him. The odor of boot polish and chewing tobacco
was over-powering. I decided to play it cool. I started talking to him as if he
were there. I told him he could ride along until I got to the front gate, but
he’d have to leave there. Then I gave him a guided tour of the new CSUMB
campus, and the various changes going on. At the front gate the odor went away.

There was no scent in my truck this time. When I’d finished
my jaunt I sat in my truck for a while looking in the same direction my guest
had been looking. What was he seeing in his world which could bring such
sadness? I turned the key, and drove home.

A few weeks later I bought a copy of “The Soldier Factory”
about the author’s time at Fort Ord in the late 1960s. He told about working as
an orderly at the base hospital, and how it would fill after large battles in
Vietnam as the hospitals in Hawaii and San Francisco overflowed with seriously
wounded men. It turns out many of the men whose names are on the Vietnam
Memorial in Washington D.C. actually died at Fort Ord.

The man sitting in my truck was wearing the white uniform of
an Army medic or orderly. I now understand the sadness in his face. The horror
he must have seen, and the suffering must have been too much. Of my many ghost
encounters this one was the most heart breaking for me. My dad was a medic
around the same time, my mother was also a medic, and I have five cousins who
fought in Vietnam.

Friday, October 05, 2012

In
2002 I got my current job working front desk at a small motel in Monterey,
California. I had been out of work for a year, so any job was welcome, and I
came to enjoy the work. The hours are a pain in the ass. I work Shift 2 which
starts at 3:00PM, and ends at 11:00PM. This gets me home around 11:30PM on a
good night. The hours took a while to adjust to. Usually I’d come home and make
a sandwich. Standing in the kitchen I would often see my neighbor, Dean, working
at his workbench on the enclosed deck of his home.

Dean
was a retired Merchant Marine who taught marksmanship at the Moss Landing
shooting range. Dean packed his own rounds (meaning he made his own bullets)
using a special press. I would see him working away in his workshop-deck often.
Dean was the kind of neighbor you dream of. He had three cats, he was quiet,
and he was great with tools. He saved my butt on many home improvement fiascoes
So that February when I started my job it was nice to see a familiar face when
I got home from work.

Later
that month I was doing emergency plumbing repair under my house. As I crawled
out into the sunlight I heard the crunching of footsteps on Dean’s gravel-covered
yard behind me. It was Dean coming around the back of his home. He greeted me
with his usual charm. We talked about my latest plumbing adventure. Dean had
undergone heart surgery a few months before, and I commented how great he
looked. When I asked him if his heart was bothering him he said “No, not anymore.”

We
made some more small talk, and then we both had to get back to work. As I
crawled back under the house I heard him crunch away. A few nights later I got
home around midnight, and I was warming up some food on the stove. As a I
waited I looked out of the kitchen window to see Dean working in his faded
yellow bathrobe. He turned and waved at me, and then returned to his work. I
filled my plate, and went off to the living room to eat.

Two
days later I’m getting into my truck to go to work, and I see two people come
out of Dean’s house. The people, a man and woman, were well dressed, but Dean
told me if I ever saw anyone strange around his place to call the sheriffs.
Dean had a number of guns in a safe. So I went over to find out who they were.
They told me they were just checking on Dean’s home. I asked if they meant they
were feeding his cats they told me the cats were long gone. I asked them why
Dean got rid of his cats…

They told me Dean was dead.

I was shocked. I said I didn't hear
the ambulance. They told me he had died back in November of last year. I was
incredulous. I told them I had seen Dean two nights ago, and we had just had a
conversation face to face only a few days before that. I told them I was
calling the police. Thankfully the neighbor from across the street, who had
heard this exchange, came over to calm me down, and told me that Dean had
indeed died four months before so I didn't have to call anyone.

I
apologized and left. I spent the rest of the day trying to figure out if I had
somehow screwed up the days I’d seen Dean, but I decided I was solid. I still
had the receipt from the hardware store for my plumbing repair. I never saw
Dean again. Many nights I look out my kitchen window hoping to see him again.
When I work in my yard I hope to hear his footsteps crunching on the gravel
behind me. I think about all of the questions I could have asked him that day.
I doubt he could have answered them, but still just to have had that chance.
All we talked about was how plumbing was a pain in the ass, life isn’t easy,
and how his heart had stopped bothering him.

I
tell people who've never seen a ghost the odds are they have, but they didn't know the person they saw was dead. I enjoy the irony of being knowledgeable
about ghosts, and having one walk right up to me in the middle of a sunny day
to say a few word without me having a clue. I miss Dean too. He was a great
guy, and I know wherever he is now he’s doing well.

Saturday, September 08, 2012

I am asked by friends why I believe in ghosts. The subtext
is why does a smart guy believe in ghosts? I ask them to define what a ghost is
exactly. Their answers vary a bit, but the gist is ghosts are spirits of the
dead.

I don’t believe ghosts are the spirits of the dead.

I don’t know what they are, but over the years I’ve kept my
ears open for scientific explanations. The big culprit so far is a phenomenon called
Infrasound. It is low-frequency sound waves which seem to affect people’s
minds. The other guilty party is atmospheric contamination. Some of this is due
to climate change. These don’t explain all of the aspects to all hauntings, but
they seem to be present in the majority of cases. I reviewed my library of
true-ghost stories, and I took notes. I found all hauntings had one or more
things in common.

The first element is underground water. Most old (haunted)
houses are built over, or next to a well. In cold climates it made sense to
build over the well to keep from going into the snow for water. Water
evaporates creating negative ions. These ions form a field which is sometimes
strong enough to influence the atmosphere. Batteries will often drain as the
negative ions complete the circuit in flashlights, and electrical gear. Their
influence on people is not clear, but I suspect they are behind the feeling of
being touched.

Underground streams and rivers compound the ions with
additional microwave radiation. These are not high levels, not enough to cook
your lunch, but enough to make you feel like you’re being watched. In areas
where there is Limestone the water will flow at various speeds generating
measurably different fields of energy.

Limestone itself is another suspect. Limestone is prone to
caves made by the underground rivers. These caves generate infrasound where
they open to the outside. Limestone gives off CO2 when exposed to acids. CO2 in
low doses will cause hallucinations such as hearing voices, and seeing shadows.
A home built over Limestone can be a ghost-generating factory.

CO2 (the cause behind rapid climate change) is also a
suspect in hauntings. The first thing a good ghost hunter checks is the CO2
levels in a home. The housing boom in the 1990s resulted in a lot of poorly
installed heating systems which resulted in CO2 poisoning. The symptoms read
like a paranormal thriller.

The housing boom lead to another fringe cause which was
spurred by toxic sheet-rock from China. The sheetrock seemed to affect
electrical wiring, and appliances. The gas caused a list of symptoms, but the
CDC made no serious study of the threat to people. There is a correlation between
the rises of reported hauntings in brand new homes. Theories of Indian burial
grounds were rampant. Now it seems the cause was the construction itself.

The 1990s saw the rise of the McMansion, over-sized single
family homes with huge square footage. The large open floor plans generate
infrasound in large doses. Then you compound things with a poorly installed
heating system, and toxic sheetrock, and the rise in the number of people
believing in ghosts makes sense.

These influences don’t explain everything. They don’t explain why
people with no knowledge of a location’s history will see the same apparitions,
or experience the exact same events that others have. I suspect they enhance
these encounters for some people. Not everyone can sing, many people cannot
color-coordinate their clothes, and there are a few people who hate chocolate.
People are built differently so how they are influenced by the things I’ve
listed here will be unique to each individual.

As I said, I don’t believe ghosts are spirits of the dead. I
believe they are manifestations of a variety of atmospheric influences we have
yet to discover. I plan to keep looking.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

I was born in 1964. My earliest memory of my dad being awe
inspired was watching him watch a Gemini Space launch on the TV in late 1966.
Dad was a know-it-all, and he went to great lengths not to be impressed. I
watched him hold his breath as the rocket cleared the launch tower. I knew this
was a big deal.

By 1968 my parents divorced, and I lived with my
grandparents in Carmel, CA. My grandfather had been a science teacher after
graduating college in 1910. The space program had his full attention. We had
plastic Revell models of the Apollo command module, and the lunar lander which
we built. By the summer of 1969 my brother, and my grandfather were as
up-to-speed on the moon shot as any American could have been.

My grandfather would often sit back in his chair rubbing his
bald head as he marveled at the progress mankind had made since his birth in
1891. He has seen the first automobiles on a railroad flat-car rolling through
his hometown of Green City, MO. He had flown on a Wright-Flyer. His father’s
general store was the first place in town to have a telephone, and the whole
town would come to use it. He saw radio born and die. He saw his first movie in
1909, it cost a nickel, and there was no sound. He would later see the first “talkies”,
then see movies in color, and finally buy a television so he could watch those
movies in his living room.

Now his black & white television was going to show him
two men walk on the moon. He rousted us
from bed at five in the morning so we wouldn’t miss the launch. It was
important to him that we saw the launch, and took in as much of the event we
could. He kept saying things would never be the same if we landed on the moon.
I sat with my brother on the floor wearing my pajamas with the feet on them.
The Saturn V rocket rumbled on the screen as it lifted off. Frank McGee’s voice
narrated the whole thing. Once they were in orbit we all relaxed.

The three day flight was filled with updates here and there
which we never missed. The landing was
surreal. My four year-old brain was overwhelmed by emotions, and input as the
cardboard image of the lander stopped on the moon. Then the fuzzy image of Neil
Armstrong on the TV climbing down the ladder, and then his famous words. It was
late at night on the California coast. When the broadcast ended we all went
outside to look up at the full moon. For the first time in human history there
was someone in the moon looking back at us. The mission continued to the
splash-down without a hitch. We watched it all as a family.

Today Neil Armstrong passed away. I admired him for the
things he never did as much as for his Apollo & Gemini flights. He never
cashed in in his fame. He could have been everywhere. He could have been
insanely wealthy just for being the first man to walk on the moon. Armstrong
embodied dignity. He was there for NASA when they would ask, but he never took
the spotlight away from what the agency was doing in the present. In so many
ways Neil Armstrong was the guy the world thinks of when they define what an
American is. Neil was always quick to remind everyone about all the people who
worked on the Apollo project, and they deserved more credit for their work
because they’d made it so easy to do his.

In today’s world of reality show douche baggery, millionaires
who are good with a ball who are assholes, and politicians who will throw their
own children into a bonfire to win Neil Armstrong stands in the minority we
once called MEN. The country has lost a
treasure today.

Monday, July 23, 2012

The first time I saw a ghost I didn’t know it was a ghost.
This is common, and I wonder how many other people have encountered a ghost
without knowing it. They look normal. Sometimes they’re dressed in old clothes
depending on their age, but so often they are mistaken for actors hired for
historical recreations. Most are ignored as we walk on by maybe giving a polite
nod to the stranger on the street. Most of us rarely notice the living, so passing
an arm’s length away from someone who’s been dead for many years is entirely
possible.

My first ghost showed up in the pizza parlor where I worked
as the prep-cook. I was 18 years old. The pizza parlor was in the small
shopping center down the street from my home. I had worked there about two
years already, and it was my home away from home. At this time of my life I
often awoke at 3:00am full of energy, and it would take hours to return to
sleep. When I’d finally wake I’d feel like shit for much of the day. I decided
the next time this happened I would just get out of bed, and go to work. This
is exactly what I did, and for three weeks I thought I had figured it all out.

So on that Wednesday morning, when I saw the ghost, my eyes
popped open around 3:10am. I was up, in the shower, dressed, and out the door
in fifteen minutes (this amazes me today because it takes me ten minutes just
to make it from my bed to the shower today). I didn’t have a car. I didn’t need
one. I loved the way the cool morning air of Carmel pinched my cheeks as I
crossed Highway 1. I had a key to the restaurant and there was no real manager
so I could do whatever I pleased.

The pickup window. Cathy is in the kitchen.

The pizza parlor itself was essentially a glorified tunnel
with the only windows located at the front. The kitchen was also located in the
front, and it wrapped around to the left ending with a long bar at the end. The
large pick-up window faced the salad bar, and beyond that was the long dining
room. Behind the bar was the huge walk-in refrigerator. In the far corner was
the pantry where I did the prep-work.

My late friend, Randy, at the bar. The dining room behind him. I saw the man standing in front of the second post back.

I made my prep list and began with making pizza dough. I
kept the lights off in the dining room because they attracted homeless people
(we called them River Rats) who would bang on the door demanding food. A dark
restaurant made me invisible. The circuit which powered the rear stockroom also
powered the arcade games. Their lights were just bright enough for me to get
around, and I could play Asteroids once I’d finished my prep work until we
opened. The 25-pound bags of pizza dough mix were in the rear store room so I
made a point to get them first.

The old prep-cook carrying bags of dough mix. The office is to the left behind the bar.

With the dough mix churning in the Hobart I began work on
the other items on my list. I sliced mushrooms, and diced lettuce for the salad
bar. There was an order to this, as it was a light day I knew I could knock out
the other stuff in the half hour it would take to make the three batches of
dough. Once the Hobart was free I could use it to grate the cheese. I had my
Panasonic boom-box blasting Van Halen and Ozzy so I was in my own universe.

The Monterey Jack cheese came in 50-pound blocks. We had a
special two-handled knife to cut these blocks into smaller blocks which could
fit into the Hobart’s grating attachment. This was also the endless source for
“Cutting the cheese” jokes. As I said before I had been here two years. In that
time I had developed the sixth-sense every restaurant worker has: the ability
to tell when someone behind you is glaring at you. You’ve been there, your
order’s taking too long, your coffee’s empty, and your wait person seems to
have forgotten you so you shoot invisible death-rays into their heads. As I
pushed the blade through the cheese block I instinctively looked up.

Through the small glassless window of the pantry door I saw
a man watching me from the dining room.

I looked down for a second and looked back up. He was still
there. He stood silhouetted against the glowing lights of the Stargate Defender
game in the middle of the dining room. He was shorter than me. His arms were
folded. I couldn’t make out any facial detail but I could tell he wasn’t happy
to see me.

Two months before the pizza parlor had been burglarized.
They have come in from the side entrance from the access hall where the
dumpster was housed. They had cleaned out all of the video games, the petty
cash, and took my first boom box. So as I stood frozen in the pantry I thought
they’d come back. No cell phones in 1982. The nearest phone was out in the
kitchen. I was locked in, and the front door was not an option anyway. I was a
typical 18 year-old male, you know, stupid, and I reached for a carving knife.

Now armed with the cheese knife and the carving knife I
walked slowly to the pantry’s swinging door. I never took my eyes off of the
man in the dining room, and he never moved. I took a deep breath. I kicked the
door open as I yelled something brave.

He was gone.

Standing there in front of the ice machine I looked out onto
a very empty dining room. He had to still be inside. The side door was a steel
fire door which made a loud whoomp
when it closed, and that was his only way out. The two bathroom doors also made
enough noise to signal that he’d gone in either one of them. I wanted to run
for a second, and then I got pissed off. I turned on all of the lights so I
could search the entire pizza parlor.

I checked the garbage-hall door (the side door) first.

It
was locked.

I kicked open the lady’s room door.

Nothing.

I kicked open the
men’s room door.

Empty.

I moved out to the center of the dining room to check
the rear where the arcade games were. There was enough space between each for
an adult man to hide, so going down the center was the safest move for me. My
heart was pounding as I made it to the back wall. There was nobody here. This
left the rear party room. I dashed through the entry way to avoid being jumped.
It was empty too. I checked the rear exit door finding it secure. This left the
long, dark garbage hall to search.

It was also empty with no signs of disturbance, and the
doors at either end were locked from the inside. I returned to finish my work,
and when I was done I left the pizza parlor to sit in the diner at the far end
of the parking lot until the sun came up.

I wrote this event off to being there so early, and I
theorized somehow part of my brain was still asleep. However on following
mornings as I worked away I would feel someone watching me from the dining
room. A couple of times I reflexively dropped what I was doing to help the
person waiting at the bar, as I often did during business hours, only to
remember as I walked out of the pantry that I was locked inside the place
alone. One morning I stepped out of the walk-in refrigerator to hear twice
girls whispering from the salad bar area on the other side of the bar. I
stepped to the end of the counter but saw nobody.

I stopped going to work so early in the morning. I was certain
it was just too early for my brain to work.

Less than two weeks later I was killing the late evening at
the pizza place. I had nothing better to do, all of my friends were either
working there, or were up at a concert in Oakland. I sat with the shift
manager, Danny, and the janitor, Ray, at the table closest to the bar. We were
making the usual shop-talk, and telling the usual bad jokes as we waited for
the place to close. Ray looked at his watch, and then he asked us if we’d hang
out until he finished the janitorial work that night. We both agreed. Danny
asked him why.

Ray told us a story.

He was vacuuming the rear dining room (were the video games
were) when he looked up to see two girls about the age of fourteen or fifteen
walking toward the bar. He assumed they’d been smoking weed in the restroom,
and nobody had checked before locking the door. He turned off his vacuum
cleaner to let them out, but as the machine fell silent the girls had vanished.
He quickly ran up to search the kitchen, and then the restrooms yet found no
one. The next night he came out of the side hallway from the men’s room to see
a dark man standing in the back dining room watching him. As he began to ask
what the guy thought he was doing the man vanished. Ray quickly locked up and
went home. He finished his work the next morning when he knew other people
would be there.

He’d seen the same guy I’d seen.

Danny said he’d seen the two girls walk past the office door
at the end of the bar a couple of times when he was there in the morning alone.
He then said he’d thought he’d seen a dark man in the dining room from the
corner of his eye, but he wrote it off to long work hours. We sat there in
silence for a good minute. Danny and I helped Ray clean up in record time. We
decided not to tell anyone. We figured if we were really seeing thing others
would too, and if not then we three had a cool story for Halloween. The wait wasn’t too long.

Maybe three days later I was closing down the place with the
girls, Cathy & Mo (short for Maureen). I had finished my stuff and sat in
the front booth where I was soon joined by Cathy. We talked as we waited for Mo
to change. Suddenly I could hear the coffee pot on the Bunn begin to rattle.
Cathy looked over to see a girl with blonde hair next to the ice machine. She
yelled “Mo!” just as the coffee pot flew off the top hot plate of the Bunn
machine. Then from the back dining room we hear Mo ask Cathy what was going
on. Cathy looked at me, looked back at
Mo, and then got up to look into the kitchen. I went back to check the pot.
Somehow it didn’t break in the fall, which was weird because I’d seen them
break for less of an impact.

We got out of there fast ending up at the all night diner
until Cathy had calmed down enough to drive home. As we sat there I filled her
in on what I knew. She was happy not to tell anyone about the incident until
more people had seen things.

This picture shows the bar with the pantry door behind the two men. Just behind the man on the right is the walk-in refrigerator door. The Bunn coffee maker is just out of view on the left.

As it turned out it wasn’t a long wait. Within the
week most of the crew had seen either the man or the two girls in the dining
room. Being young we all decided to hang out before work to hash out what was
going on (because teenagers are experts in just about everything).

We decided we had all seen something. Some of the most
serious people had an encounter, and this made it credible. The next big
question was why? I had been there for two years, Cathy had been there for
three, and a few others had been on staff for a year. We had all been in the
restaurant alone at many times, and none of us had seen anything strange. Why
now? We settled on the theory that construction for the new half of the
shopping center had awoken something. My sighting began six weeks after they’d
first break ground.

We did some checking. The initial construction company had
been fired, and replaced overnight. In California when construction crews
discover burial sites they must halt, and allow for the state to excavate the
area. This can cost a lot of money in delays for the contractor. We thought the
sudden replacement of the construction crew might have been linked to something
dug up. We could never find out more because the new guys knew nothing, and the
owner’s people said nothing.

Over the next couple of weeks things continued to happen.
The heavy fire-door would slam for no reason. This continued even after we locked
it from the inside. Footsteps were heard walking around the salad bar in the
mornings. One of the favorite tricks was to freak someone out as they punched
in the code to deactivate the alarm in less than 90 seconds. The fire-door
would usually slam. The most memorable incident was the sound of approaching
footsteps which sounded like someone walking through an inch of water. I
complemented the invisible man on that one.

After one stressful shift I was alone, and I was getting
ready to turn on the alarm. The keypad was located on the wall at the end of
the bar. I turned off all of the lights. Just as I reached for the pad I hear a
coffee mug jingling. Over on the bar next to the register was a try filled with
mugs. The one in the middle of the tray was visibly shaking.

“You’re gonna have to do something a little more spectacular
than that. I just not in the mood tonight” I said to whatever. Damned if that
coffee mug didn’t fly up, and bounce down the bar until it fell off the end
landing at my feet. I saluted the
unseen, entered the code, and left.

At some point Danny suggested we do a séance complete with
his Ouija board. The first one was a complete waste of time. Danny stuck the
Ouija on a shelf in the office and forgot about it. The following week I was
recounting the séance to our bartender. When I showed him the board in the
office he suggested we try again that night after work. As it turned out a
mutual friend was in earshot and begged to be included too. Once everyone else
had gone I got out the board.

The bartender and I decided to wear blindfolds so we
couldn’t rig the answers. We wrapped towels around our heads, and gave the
third guy a pen to write stuff down. With the lights turned off we placed our
fingers on the Planchette and began asking questions. For the first few minutes
I felt like an idiot. I’m sitting in a dark pizza parlor with a towel wrapped
around my head with Mormon bartender who’s doing the same thing. Then the
bartender starts asking questions. The Planchette began to move under my
fingers.

“Do you want us to leave?” he asked. The Planchette suddenly
jerked to a point on the board where it froze. The bartender and I whipped off
our blindfolds to see the board. The answer was “NO.”

We stood up together, I turned on the alarm, and we went out
the front door. The third guy was begging to know what had happened. Neither of
us spoke until the bartender’s pickup truck was at the stoplight at the front
of the center. We looked at each other as we both blurted out “was that you?”
We filled the third guy in. That pointer was yanked hard under our fingers. One
of the weirdest things I’ve ever experienced in my life. The bartender quit
soon after this.

The janitor, Ray, would last another year, but only because
he’d come in the mornings to clean. His wife worked in the kitchen anyway. One
Sunday morning the ghost was on a tear. I saw him twice that morning already,
and I ignored him. So he picked on Ray. First thing was to slam that fire door
while Ray was coming out of the Lady’s room directly opposite. He was startled
pretty bad, and had to sit for a while. Then later I was in the kitchen and
happened to look up to see the dark man standing by the hallway leading to the
fire door. Ray saw him too. He looked at me, I said I’d seen him, and he
started crying. Ray was a good guy, his parents were killed by Nazis in France,
and for this tough guy to break down was unreal.

I left the pizza place after two more years. I moved across
the parking lot to the Crossroads Cinemas. It wasn’t haunted, and it was a
great place to make out. I’d been there nine months, and one night after
locking up the theater a few of us went to the diner to drink coffee, and shoot
the breeze.

We’d only been seated for a few minutes before two Sheriff’s
deputies walked in and approached our table. They asked us who we were, and why
we were out so late (it was after midnight).
I explained where we worked, and why we were out late. Then one of the
deputies recognized me from the theater, and all was cool. I asked what the
problem was, and they said somebody was messing with the janitor at the pizza
parlor. They went and sat at the counter, and we shrugged. Then Ray and his
oldest son, Charlie, came into the diner, and marched straight up to our table.

“Just tell me it was you.” He said. I looked at him shaking
my head.

“Just tell me it was you, and I’ll have a good laugh.” He
said. I told him I’d just got off work, and the other two people worked with
me. I asked him what was wrong, and pointed to the deputies as I told him about
being questioned a few minutes before. He sat down. His hands shook, and he was
sweating badly.

He said that he and Charlie had shown up at the pizza parlor
to start cleaning at 11:00pm. Within minutes they heard loud noises coming from
the garbage hall. It sounded like cardboard boxes being tossed around. Charlie
went out to take a look. He found boxes thrown up and down the length of the
hall, but both doors were locked. He returned to the dining room, but before he
could fill Ray in the sounds began again. This time something pounded on the
door too. This time Ray opened the door. The noises stopped as it swung open.
Ray cursed at the culprit, and locked the door.

He called mall security, and the lone guard walked over
where he met Ray, and Charlie outside of the pizza parlor. As Ray was
explaining the situation the sounds erupted again from the garbage hall. They could
hear it clearly from outside. The security guard suggested it must be raccoons.
Ray escorted him to the garbage hall door inside, and the guard went in to take
a look. The sounds stopped again. The guard searched the entire hall, which was
seventy feet from end to end. He found only cardboard boxes strewn from one end
to the other.

He came out shaking his head. He found no signs of animals,
and the doors were locked. Then the noise started up again. This time it
sounded as if the boxes were being thrown from both ends at once. Then
something pounded on the door again. The guard checked again. There was nobody
in the hall. He suggested they all exit the restaurant until the sheriffs came,
and then he called them.

A squad car arrived in under a minute. As they stood out
front explaining the problem, ruckus resumed inside the hallway again for the
deputies to hear, and they drew their guns as they went inside. They search the
hallway too, and found nothing. Once back outside they didn’t have time to report
before the noise started again. The deputies, according to Ray, looked at each
other, and said they’d done everything they could do. They told Ray to lock up
and come back tomorrow, and then they left.

Ray just left the lights on, locked the door, and went home.
He saw me through the window of the diner, and decided to stop in to see if I
had decided to pull a prank on him. I
told Ray I hadn’t thought about the pizza parlor since I’d left. I was
surprised by Ray’s story, and noted he was shook up. He quit the place a few
days later.

My life went on largely ghost-free until the 1990s. As
things changed my visits to the shopping center dwindled for a time. On one
Halloween I happened to be down there for a hair appointment, and I stopped
into the book store to see what was new (and because there was a cute redhead
dressed as a cat). We started talking. She mentioned she liked working there
because the place had a ghost. I asked her if it was a dark man or two girls,
and she told me she’d seen both

.

The last time I’d heard about the ghosts at the shopping
center was two years ago. It’s nice to know their still there.